Adding customer access to confluence.

I work for a fairly small company (less then 20 people) we are using the JIRA and Confluence. We run into the following problem. We want to roll out the customer support page which will be knowledge base for our customers with well known bugs described. We want it to be nicely integrated with the rest of our system we thought that the Confluence is providing the features we want to. However being a small company with a lot of foreign users we don't really want to put every single foreign user to our system ( we don't want them to modify the data just browse the page).

We are not sure of what is the best way of doing it - should we create the exported page for our own logging system which would display everything for our user?

Is the only option buying the additional licenses for all the foreign users?

Can we purchase the support desk system that introduces the customers login which are not consuming the licenses and add them permission to browse the confluence page?

Should we create the "Guest" account and provide our own web page login which would redirect any outside customer for the guest account in the confluence.

1 answer

1 accepted

If you only want your customers to access your Confluence instance, then you'll have to create accounts for them with CAN-USE permission and possibly a specific group membership so that they'll only have access to specific content. This will count towards your license and incur the license fee. There isn't a way to identify anonymous users and only provide a subset of them with access.

Well, yes it helps in terms of it answers our question, but it is not ideal, as we would like to share our knowledge with customers and we really enjoy your products, but it seems like we need to address the issue by changing the technology of sharing the data with customers... Which is not ideal.

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We just signed up for confluence, so I'm a bit surprised. So, to clarify, you're saying that Confluence cannot serve our knowledge base content to the public internet? Any visibility at all MUST be through a named and managed confluence user account?

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Hi Jerry, Absolutely Confluence spaces you designate can be accessed via 'anonymous users' on the public internet. So, say you have 100 spaces (we have more than that as it builds over time), 1, 2 or all of them can be set up for anonymous access. It's your choice.

Atlassian itself uses Confluence to serve up its software documentation to the public, so again YES, Confluence can serve your knowledge base content to the public internet. What I'm gathering from the use case behind this question, it's specifically targeting selected customers viewing content - for that to happen, those selected customers need accounts.

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